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An example is the MS BotFramework.

The documentation on their site is pretty extensive. Is it acceptable to paste that information directly into a SO Documentation topic? Or does it all have to be user written?

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  • A major issue I see with that is the license of the information provided by Microsoft. Could you even legally use that text as-is?
    – SplittyDev
    Feb 10, 2017 at 5:42
  • @SplittyDev I dont see why not, if you link back to their site. It is not like this is being used for profit or gain. Feb 10, 2017 at 5:45
  • Ah yeah I guess that would be okay. Other than that, I don't see a problem with doing this. I've seen a lot of copy-pasted stuff on SO Docs, though that was mostly only one paragraph and not the whole example. I'm not too experienced though, so better get a third opinion.
    – SplittyDev
    Feb 10, 2017 at 5:51
  • 4
    "I dont see why not, if you link back to their site. It is not like this is being used for profit or gain" -- On the contrary, I don't see why it would be okay without a license that explicitly allowed it. @SplittyDev 's original objection should be taken seriously. (Besides that, duplicating official documentation is a questionable move even from a purely editorial point of view.)
    – duplode
    Feb 10, 2017 at 6:44

1 Answer 1

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Please don't

It's fine to quote bits of official documentation as long as you properly cite it. But generally we don't want long sections of official documentation copied into SO Documentation. We're trying to do something a little different. The goal is for our content to be:

  • Crowd-sourced,
  • Community-vetted, and
  • Example-driven.

Copying official documentation (besides being a little underhanded), fails to achieve those goals as a rule. We want you to use your experience to write the sort of content you'd find useful when you forget, say, how to use lookahead and lookbehind regexen. It's not intended to be complete (unless completeness is critical) or a tutorial (unless the student is fairly bright). Instead focus on the humble task of being a useful answer to questions that would be closed as "too broad" on the Q&A side.

In addition, copying and pasting will give you an unfair advantage in terms of reputation gain until someone notices and rolls back your changes.

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  • Thanks, this is what I thought but wanted to check. Feb 10, 2017 at 7:09

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